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Rachel Holmes; Amanda Ravetz – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
Diffracting a research project in a UK primary school, this paper concerns feminist materialist orientations to odd-ness as a relational, distributed, and affective form of "thinking-feeling". It suggests that attuning to affect as it moves through a context resistant to disruption, involves becoming "bad researchers"; bad for…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Inclusion, Research Projects, Elementary Schools
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Mishra Tarc, Aparna – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
This paper introduces researchers and scholars to psychosocial qualitative methods when researching affective aspects of classroom pedagogy. It theorises affect as felt processes that defy representation circulating in teaching and learning. Turning to the psychoanalytic field of infant observation, the author outlines the immense potential of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Student Relationship, Educational Research, Learning Processes
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Katherine Burlingame – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2023
Learning by doing has become a common phrase in the scholarship of teaching and learning as research continues to emphasize the benefits of active student engagement in higher education. Instead of passive vessels to be filled with information, students become the architects of their own education. While traditional ways of teaching focus on what…
Descriptors: College Students, Geography, Educational Research, Active Learning
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Mayes, Eve; Wolfe, Melissa Joy – Critical Studies in Education, 2020
This article considers ontological conceptualizations of shame-interest as experienced in educational research. Shame has frequently been reported in research as a property of the autonomous individual: the shame of the participant to share with the researcher, and the shame of the researcher to reflexively eliminate. "Shame-interest" is…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior, Research Methodology
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Ziols, Ryan – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2020
This paper briefly examines theories of affect and some of its possibilities and limits for mathematics education research. First, psychological, socio-cultural, embodied, and new materialist perspectives are considered. The paper juxtaposes emerging and older theories of affect in mathematics education with alternative approaches in the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Educational Research, Educational Theories, Affective Behavior
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Reindl, Stefan – International Journal of Learning Technology, 2021
Emotion (or affective) artificial intelligence (AI) is a hot topic within the greater field of AI, in both, academic as well as practitioner circles. One of the industries with great potential for AI implementation is education. While emotion AI is commonly referred to as a field of growing interest, research in the specific context of education…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Artificial Intelligence, Educational Research, Technology Uses in Education
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Wu, Chih-Hung; Huang, Yueh-Min; Hwang, Jan-Pan – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2016
Affect can significantly influence education/learning. Thus, understanding a learner's affect throughout the learning process is crucial for understanding motivation. In conventional education/learning research, learner motivation can be known through postevent self-reported questionnaires. With the advance of affective computing technology,…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Educational Trends, Affective Behavior, Learning Motivation
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Reber, Rolf; Greifeneder, Rainer – Educational Psychologist, 2017
Processing fluency--the experienced ease with which a mental operation is performed--has attracted little attention in educational psychology, despite its relevance. The present article reviews and integrates empirical evidence on processing fluency that is relevant to school education. Fluency is important, for instance, in learning,…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response, Learning Processes
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Artino, Anthony R., Jr. – Internet and Higher Education, 2012
In recent years, several scholars have called for more inquiry on the role of emotions in education. And while the dynamics of the emotions that emerge during online learning may be difficult to observe, limited evidence suggests that, not unlike traditional classroom instruction, emotions have important affects on learning, engagement, and…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Internet, Web Based Instruction, Electronic Learning
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Daniels, Lia M.; Stupnisky, Robert H. – Internet and Higher Education, 2012
This commentary investigates the extent to which the control-value theory of emotions (Pekrun, 2006) is applicable in online learning environments. Four empirical studies in this special issue of "The Internet and Higher Education" explicitly used the control-value theory as their theoretical framework and several others have components of the…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Online Courses, Web Based Instruction, Psychological Patterns
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Beard, Colin; Clegg, Sue; Smith, Karen – British Educational Research Journal, 2007
This article argues that we need richer conceptions of students as affective and embodied selves and a clearer theorisation of the role of emotion in educational encounters. These areas are currently under-researched and under-theorised in higher education. The first part of the article explores the literature on emotion. The second reports on a…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Higher Education, Learning Processes, Case Studies
Mudge, Suzanne D.; Grinnan, Cullen T.; Priesmeyer, H. Richard – Online Submission, 2006
Current educational research suggests that emotions can either enhance or inhibit the ability to learn, with social and cultural influences causing changes in behavior and altering biological processes. In this exploratory study researchers utilized a qualitative design to seek insight into student emotions associated with school attitude and…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Educational Experience, Educational Research, School Attitudes
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Furlong, Michael J.; Whipple, Angela D.; St. Jean, Grace; Simental, Jenne; Soliz, Alicia; Punthuna, Sandy – California School Psychologist, 2003
This article discusses the school engagement literature and offers a conceptual framework with the intention of developing a common terminology to more efficiently organize research and practice. Three distinct perspectives are outlined in relation to school engagement: psychological, educational, and developmental. Four main contexts of…
Descriptors: Educational Research, At Risk Students, Educational Environment, Child Development